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So, at first: I like the new feature, although I'm not quite convinced about the security.

This answer is a short bug report for a problem I noticed and that was too long to write as a comment.

Problem:

I'm running Chrome with an extension that will strip out the Referer HTTP header for any third-party site. So if I browser meta.stackoverflow.com, any files under that domain will receive the proper header, but the header will be empty/missing for any other cross domain request. When I click the Run code snippet button, that will result in a cross domain request (and so there will be no Referer header in my case), the result will be a default error ASP.NET message instead of the actual code snippet:

Server Error in '/' Application.

 

Runtime Error

 

[...]

The HTTP code of the request is a 500. If I send along a Referer header with a value of any string (even not valid hostnames), it works instead and gives me a 200. Seems to me like there is a litte server misconfiguration. The problem is not unique to the extension, as I've tested and can confirm the behavior using curl.

Is this wanted behavior (as this might not have any security effort, if the Referer does not seem to be checked on server side)? If wanted, could you add a better error message for that cases?

Edit: This problem seems to be fixed. Thank you!

So, at first: I like the new feature, although I'm not quite convinced about the security.

This answer is a short bug report for a problem I noticed and that was too long to write as a comment.

Problem:

I'm running Chrome with an extension that will strip out the Referer HTTP header for any third-party site. So if I browser meta.stackoverflow.com, any files under that domain will receive the proper header, but the header will be empty/missing for any other cross domain request. When I click the Run code snippet button, that will result in a cross domain request (and so there will be no Referer header in my case), the result will be a default error ASP.NET message instead of the actual code snippet:

Server Error in '/' Application.

 

Runtime Error

 

[...]

The HTTP code of the request is a 500. If I send along a Referer header with a value of any string (even not valid hostnames), it works instead and gives me a 200. Seems to me like there is a litte server misconfiguration. The problem is not unique to the extension, as I've tested and can confirm the behavior using curl.

Is this wanted behavior (as this might not have any security effort, if the Referer does not seem to be checked on server side)? If wanted, could you add a better error message for that cases?

Edit: This problem seems to be fixed. Thank you!

So, at first: I like the new feature, although I'm not quite convinced about the security.

This answer is a short bug report for a problem I noticed and that was too long to write as a comment.

Problem:

I'm running Chrome with an extension that will strip out the Referer HTTP header for any third-party site. So if I browser meta.stackoverflow.com, any files under that domain will receive the proper header, but the header will be empty/missing for any other cross domain request. When I click the Run code snippet button, that will result in a cross domain request (and so there will be no Referer header in my case), the result will be a default error ASP.NET message instead of the actual code snippet:

Server Error in '/' Application.

Runtime Error

[...]

The HTTP code of the request is a 500. If I send along a Referer header with a value of any string (even not valid hostnames), it works instead and gives me a 200. Seems to me like there is a litte server misconfiguration. The problem is not unique to the extension, as I've tested and can confirm the behavior using curl.

Is this wanted behavior (as this might not have any security effort, if the Referer does not seem to be checked on server side)? If wanted, could you add a better error message for that cases?

Edit: This problem seems to be fixed. Thank you!

edit due to fix of problem
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So, at first: I like the new feature, although I'm not quite convinced about the security.

This answer is a short bug report for a problem I noticed and that was too long to write as a comment.

Problem:

I'm running Chrome with an extension that will strip out the Referer HTTP header for any third-party site. So if I browser meta.stackoverflow.com, any files under that domain will receive the proper header, but the header will be empty/missing for any other cross domain request. When I click the Run code snippet button, that will result in a cross domain request (and so there will be no Referer header in my case), the result will be a default error ASP.NET message instead of the actual code snippet:

Server Error in '/' Application.

Runtime Error

[...]

The HTTP code of the request is a 500. If I send along a Referer header with a value of any string (even not valid hostnames), it works instead and gives me a 200. Seems to me like there is a litte server misconfiguration. The problem is not unique to the extension, as I've tested and can confirm the behavior using curl.

Is this wanted behavior (as this might not have any security effort, if the Referer does not seem to be checked on server side)? If wanted, could you add a better error message for that cases?

Edit: This problem seems to be fixed. Thank you!

So, at first: I like the new feature, although I'm not quite convinced about the security.

This answer is a short bug report for a problem I noticed and that was too long to write as a comment.

Problem:

I'm running Chrome with an extension that will strip out the Referer HTTP header for any third-party site. So if I browser meta.stackoverflow.com, any files under that domain will receive the proper header, but the header will be empty/missing for any other cross domain request. When I click the Run code snippet button, that will result in a cross domain request (and so there will be no Referer header in my case), the result will be a default error ASP.NET message instead of the actual code snippet:

Server Error in '/' Application.

Runtime Error

[...]

The HTTP code of the request is a 500. If I send along a Referer header with a value of any string (even not valid hostnames), it works instead and gives me a 200. Seems to me like there is a litte server misconfiguration. The problem is not unique to the extension, as I've tested and can confirm the behavior using curl.

Is this wanted behavior (as this might not have any security effort, if the Referer does not seem to be checked on server side)? If wanted, could you add a better error message for that cases?

So, at first: I like the new feature, although I'm not quite convinced about the security.

This answer is a short bug report for a problem I noticed and that was too long to write as a comment.

Problem:

I'm running Chrome with an extension that will strip out the Referer HTTP header for any third-party site. So if I browser meta.stackoverflow.com, any files under that domain will receive the proper header, but the header will be empty/missing for any other cross domain request. When I click the Run code snippet button, that will result in a cross domain request (and so there will be no Referer header in my case), the result will be a default error ASP.NET message instead of the actual code snippet:

Server Error in '/' Application.

Runtime Error

[...]

The HTTP code of the request is a 500. If I send along a Referer header with a value of any string (even not valid hostnames), it works instead and gives me a 200. Seems to me like there is a litte server misconfiguration. The problem is not unique to the extension, as I've tested and can confirm the behavior using curl.

Is this wanted behavior (as this might not have any security effort, if the Referer does not seem to be checked on server side)? If wanted, could you add a better error message for that cases?

Edit: This problem seems to be fixed. Thank you!

added 141 characters in body
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So, at first: I like the new feature, although I'm not quite convinced about the security.

This answer is a short bug report for a problem I noticed and that was too long to write as a comment.

Problem:

I'm running Chrome with an extension that will strip out the Referer HTTP header for any third-party site. So if I browser meta.stackoverflow.com, any files under that domain will receive the proper header, but the header will be empty/missing for any other cross domain request. When I click the Run code snippet button, that will result in a cross domain request (and so there will be no Referer header in my case), the result will be a default error ASP.NET message instead of the actual code snippet:

Server Error in '/' Application.

Runtime Error

[...]

The HTTP code of the request is a 500. If I send along a Referer header with a value of any string (even not valid hostnamehostnames), it works instead and gives me a 200. Seems to me like there is a litte server misconfiguration. The problem is not unique to the extension, as I've tested and can confirm the behavior using curl.

Is this wanted behavior (as this might not have any security effort, if the Referer does not seem to be checked on server side)? If wanted, could you add a better error message for that cases?

So, at first: I like the new feature, although I'm not quite convinced about the security.

This answer is a short bug report for a problem I noticed and that was too long to write as a comment.

Problem:

I'm running Chrome with an extension that will strip out the Referer HTTP header for any third-party site. So if I browser meta.stackoverflow.com, any files under that domain will receive the proper header, but the header will be empty/missing for any other cross domain request. When I click the Run code snippet button, that will result in a cross domain request (and so there will be no Referer header in my case), the result will be a default error ASP.NET message instead of the actual code snippet:

Server Error in '/' Application.

Runtime Error

[...]

The HTTP code of the request is a 500. If I send along a Referer header with any string (even not valid hostname), it works instead and gives me a 200. Seems to me like there is a litte misconfiguration.

Is this wanted behavior (as this might not have any security effort, if the Referer does not seem to be checked on server side)? If wanted, could you add a better error message for that cases?

So, at first: I like the new feature, although I'm not quite convinced about the security.

This answer is a short bug report for a problem I noticed and that was too long to write as a comment.

Problem:

I'm running Chrome with an extension that will strip out the Referer HTTP header for any third-party site. So if I browser meta.stackoverflow.com, any files under that domain will receive the proper header, but the header will be empty/missing for any other cross domain request. When I click the Run code snippet button, that will result in a cross domain request (and so there will be no Referer header in my case), the result will be a default error ASP.NET message instead of the actual code snippet:

Server Error in '/' Application.

Runtime Error

[...]

The HTTP code of the request is a 500. If I send along a Referer header with a value of any string (even not valid hostnames), it works instead and gives me a 200. Seems to me like there is a litte server misconfiguration. The problem is not unique to the extension, as I've tested and can confirm the behavior using curl.

Is this wanted behavior (as this might not have any security effort, if the Referer does not seem to be checked on server side)? If wanted, could you add a better error message for that cases?

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